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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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dispence with time nor grievousnesse of his punishments but to make the passion of one availeable for many Otherwise if it might have dispensed with one degree of extremity of punishment due to sin it might also have dispensed with two and consequently with all Others answer that the punishments of sin eternally remaining must according to the rules of divine justice be eternall but it is no way necessary neither doth the justice of God require that the punishments of sin repented of ceasing and forsaken should be everlasting For as Divines note there are three things to be considered in sin the aversion from an infinite and incommutable good the inordinate conversion to a finite good and the continuing in the same or ceasing from it and to these severall things in sin there are three severall things answering in the punishment of it For to the aversion which is objectively infinite there answereth the losse of God which is an infinite losse To the inordinate conversion of the sinner to things transitory there answereth a sensible smart and griefe intensively finite as the pleasure the sinner taketh in the transitory things he inordinately loveth is finite To the eternity of sin remaining everlastingly in staine or guilt or continuance of it for a time answereth the eternity of punishment or the suffering of the same but for a time Now our Saviour Christ suffered only for those sins which he meant to breake off by framing the sinners to repentance and therfore it was no way necessary for the satisfying of divine justice that he should endure eternall punishment A third answer is that Christ suffered for a time because he suffered to satisfie and so to overcome upon the crosse he triumphed meritoriously over principalities and powers therefore his sufferings could not continue for ever but must have an end For in suffering he had not satisfied justice nor conquered the enemies of our salvation if he had lien under the punishment of our sins eternally But this sheweth the reason why Christ suffered but for a time rather then how his suffering for a time could satisfie the justice of God for ever which had deserved eternall death The fourth answer is more full and free from exception that Christ suffered but for a time because it was impossible he should be held under of the sorrows of death Act. 2. 24. The wicked suffer eternally because they being cast under the curse they cannot deliver themselves and justice will not set them free but Christ in suffering did overcome and delivered himselfe so that his sufferings continued but for a time In kind his sufferings were the same with those which in us should have continued for ever Chamier Tom. 2. l. 5. cap. 12. Sect 4. although they did not continue wherefore because they had an end not of themselves or their owne nature but of the power of Christ He overcame those punishments which had been altogether eternall if he could not have overcome Lastly it is objected that if God did elect and choose some men to grace and glory in and through Jesus Christ Christ needed Synodal Dord ubi supra not nor yet could make satisfaction for them for in as much as they were beloved of God we cannot conceive how satisfaction should be needfull or could be made for them Thus some dispute with great confidence but little strength For this Proposition God loveth whom he hath chosen or to chuse is to love doth admit a double sence one this whom God doth elect them he loveth or willeth well unto them in time to make them actuall heires of grace and glory in Jesus Christ and thus it is most true Illi tantum à parte ante ratione Dei n●gant meritum Christi effectum electionis illud constituunt ita ut Deus prius homines elegisse postea sic absolutè electis Filium tanquā salutis medium d●disse dicatur St●g● pag. 49● and doth not exclude but inferre the necessity of satisfaction another sence may be that whom God doth elect them he doth love as made actuall heires of grace and glory by the influence of his love and in this it should exclude the necessity of satisfaction but so it is not to be admitted It is not absurd to say the elect are in grace with God in respect of ordination or appointment but after are brought into grace by Christ in respect of the actuall collation and communication When Christ is said to reconcile us unto God the meaning is not that God did then first begin to love or will well unto us as if he did hate and will to damne us before for then we must admit a proper change in the purpose and internall will of God proceeding from an externall cause which is contrary both to Scripture and sound reason but whereas formerly we lay under wrath deserved by sin now we are received into favour and friendship with God For reconciliation is a transient act done in time which inferrs a change in the creature reconciled a change of state not of qualities and followes the obedience of Christ as the effect the cause and which God imparteth to believers Reconciliation as the Scripture speaks of it imports not any change in God nor the externall good will or love of God which remains in himselfe and worketh not any change in the creature but a blessing granted to us in time that we who were the children of wrath by nature should be the Sons of God by grace we who were enemies and hated in respect of the effects of wrath and desert of sin should be made friends and deare to God the enmity being taken away by the bloud of Christ And from hence we may learne how the new Covenant in many things hath the prerogative above the old For wherein Moses mediated it was by the power of Christ but Christ was that one Mediatour who mediated from his owne authority and immediate power Moses was called by God and the people but an imperfect Mediatour as not a right middle person but Christ was a fit middle person both God and man partaking the nature both of the offending and offended party and so a middle person not only in office but in nature willing and fitting to mediate Moses by reason of his weaknesse was neither powerfull with God nor yet fully compassionate and powerfull with the people But Christ was man for the whole body of his brethren to prevaile for them and man with his brethren to be fully sensible and compassionate Heb. 2. 17. Againe he was man with God to present a perfect ransome or price of reconciliation and he was God with man to bow them sufficiently to accept the reconciliation offered Moses stood in need to mediate for himselfe as for the people but Christ having no controversie for himselfe mediated only for the people and hath perfected wherin Moses wanted For he fully bowes and circumciseth the hearts of his brethren to
common cause doth not distinguish but if grace be common to them that believe and them that believe not it is only the common cause of conversion and doth not separate the believer from the unbeliever Men are said to sanctifie purge and free themselves as the instruments of God and free agents subordinate to grace predetermining but the Scripture never saith that man is the cause separating himselfe from the number of reprobates externally called in like manner with himselfe Conversion as it is an act supernaturall in us should be the effect of divine vocation but the cause of comparative vocation should be the meere will or pleasure of the creature Grace and liberty cannot be mixed together in the partiality of the cause because liberty as the Patrons of that opinion hold is a free indifferent elective cause but grace a cause determinate to produce one effect The use of grace is the application of actuall grace to act But if the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will neither grace preventing nor co-operating doth apply grace to it worke not preventing grace because no meere power as such doth actuate it self nor co-operating because in order of causality it goeth not before the efficiency of the will If God give to believe and not only power Phil. 1. 19. to believe to believe and not only to believe when we will to believe then by grace he determineth the will to believe suffer will and the efficacie of grace is reduced unto God willing and determining And if he worke in us both to will and to doe Phil. 2. 13. Mat. 11. 27. not according to the liberty of our will but his own good pleasure if to will and doe inclinably rightly and well and not so as we may resist then he determineth the will to will and doe by his grace To what end doe the promises and threatnings tend may some man say if God doe worke all things by his effectuall power in them that believe To what end but that men might be saved But God doth that which pertaineth to a King and Law-giver towards many when that which pertaineth to the secret and unutterable dispensation of his grace he doth not doe that is he invites many in the Ministery of his Word and externall administration of the Covenant whom he doth not inwardly instruct and draw taking away the blindnesse and hardnesse of the heart But then the invitation is a giftlesse gift Not so neither but rather he is a most unthankfull servant of a perverse minde that he Deus sic movet hominem ad bona opera ut homo cognoscat vetit Deo monenti moventi ultrò morem gerat Nec tantum Deus agit cum voluntatibus nostris sed etiam per voluntates Isa 53. 10. Isa 45. ● 12. Psal 8. 8. Ps 72. 8 ● 10 Ps 100. 1 2 3. Jer. 23. 5 6. cannot obey For this inability is no cause of disobedience proceedeth from no fault of the faculties subject to the minde and will from no naturall quality of the matter necessitating but the meer wilfulnesse and perversenesse of the soul The invitation of God is not so hard that man cannot fulfill it if he would nor wicked that we cannot will to doe it without sinne but lawfull just honest and such as if man would he could not but execute so farre as he truly judgeth it ought to be willed and executed If the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will to things opposite then the promises of God the Father made to his Sonne might all be frustrate That he should see his seed that the people should come unto him from the North and the West and from the Isles that he should possesse the Gentiles as his inheritance that his dominion should be from Sea to Sea that a willing people should come unto him c. But the Covenant of God with his Sonne cannot be made void and of none effect If some may object conversion be so the Determinatio Dei est externa aequiv●ca no● vitalis principalis Humana verò interna univoca vitalis subordi●ata Deus ita utitur voluntate ut ipsa voluntas sese electivè vitaliter ex practico rationis judicio agat Deus pr●mò principaliter ab aeterno actum liberum ut futurum liberè ponendum determinat sed non ad alium sed ad ●undem numero actum ad quem voluntas in tempore determinavit ●ese Causa actus liberi est potentia determinata non simpliciter potentia Deus sic movet res necessarias ut non fiant contingentes sic movet res co●tingentes ut voluntarias ut non adimit eis contingentiam voluntatem Quando superior causa est physica a legesoluta inferier mora●is legi subdita esto quod superior physica influit in inseriorem tamen si in●erior est libera rea esse potest in●erior non superior Virg. Aeneid 8. fati● egere volentem worke of God then man doth not repent and believe but God But this followeth not for repentance is the gift of God but the act of man God is the cause of willing efficient but not formall the cause externall and effective but not vitally efficient The determination of God externall and vitall volition differ as cause and effect for he worketh in us to will but volition doth not worke to will the determination of God as efficient is externall and respecteth the will in the first act of its influx but vitall determination is internall and respecteth good to be chosen or to be desired In man not converted two things are to be considered native contumacy and the not curing of that native contumacy The native contumacy is of themselves as darknes from the earth the not curing of this cōtumacy is of God as a cause physicall because he can cure it but doth not but not as a Morall cause because he is not bound to heale or cure it The effect of God not curing this native contumacy is only a negative non-conversion physicall or not culpable as a morall effect The absence of the sunne is the cause why the darknesse of the night is not removed but the darkenesse it selfe is not from the sunne Fault is a morall defect and cannot arise but from a morall cause and deficient Culpable non-conversion is a consequent of Gods not curing our native contumacy but no effect thereof as of a morall cause because God is not bound to remove it either by Law debt justice promise or Covenant and betwixt the resistance of the Spirit and Gods not-conversion the free willing of the corrupt will and voluntary love of native contumacy doth intercede Not only ability to believe but beliefe it selfe is merited by the death of Christ and for Christ vouchsafed to them who are called according to his purpose In this vocation of a sinner God doth so administer both
the increase of thy kine and the flocks of thy sheep in the Land which he sware unto thy fathers to give thee Thou shalt be blessed above all people and there shall not be male or female barren amongst you or among your cattell And the Lord will take away from thee all sicknesse and will put none of the evill diseases of Egypt which thou knowest upon thee but will lay them upon all them that hate thee The Lord thy God bringeth thee into a good Land a Land Deut. 8. 7 8 9. 11. 14 15. of brookes of water of fountaines and depths that spring out of the vallies and hils a Land of wheat and barley and Vines and Fig-trees and Pomegranates a Land of Oile Olive and Honey A Land wherein thou shalt eat bread without scarcenesse thou shalt not lacke any thing in it a land whose stones are iron and out of whose hils thou maist digge brasse The Lord hath vouched thee this day to be his peculiar Deut. 26. 18 19. people as he hath promised thee and that thou shouldest keep all his Commandements And to make thee high above all nations which he hath made in praise and in name and in honour and that thou maiest be Deut. 28. 1 2 c. an holy people unto the Lord thy God as he hath spoken Secondly The Lord promised to chuse a place to cause his name to dwell there and set his Tabernacle amongst them and walke with them But when you goe over Jordane and dwell in the Land Lev. 26 4 5 6 7 8 9 11. Deut. 12. 10 11 12. 16. 6. which the Lord your God giveth you to inherit when he giveth you rest from all your enemies round about so that ye dwell in safety Then shall there be a place which the Lord your God shall choose to cause his name to dwell there thither shall ye bring all that I command you And I Lev. 26. 10 12. will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my soule shall not abhorre you And I will walke among you and will be your God and ye shall be my people For the Lord hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation Psal 132. 13. 14. This is my rest for ever here will I dwell for I have desired it Thirdly Free forgivenesse of sinnes is likewise promised in this Covenant This is implyed in that he promiseth to be their God for if he be theirs he will be favourable to their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more And so much is expressed when upon repentance and turning unto him he hath proclaimed himselfe ready to receive them into favour If from thence Deut. 4. 29 30. thou shalt seeke the Lord thy God thou shalt find him if thou seeke him with all thine heart and with all thy soule And it shall come to Deut. 30. 1 2 3. passe when all these things shall come upon thee the blessing and the curse which I have set before thee and thou shalt call them to mind among all the nations whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee And shalt returne unto the Lord thy God and shalt obey his voice according to all that I command thee this day thou and thy children That then the Lord thy God will turne thy Captivity and have compassion upon thee and will returne and gather thee from all nations When thy people Israel be smitten downe before the enemy because they have sinned 1 King 8. 33 34. Man as capable of Justification is ● sinner as be actually receiveth Justification a Believer against thee and shall turne againe unto thee and confesse thy Name and pray and make supplication unto thee in this house Then heare thou in heaven and forgive the sinne of thy people Israel and bring them againe unto the Land Moreover the Lord made himselfe knowne to be the God that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sinne when he gave this Covenant unto his people But of this before Fourthly Eternall life is promised in the Covenant for God is not the God of the dead but of the living and therefore the faithfull Jewes which have God for their God doe live still not Math. 22. 32. Math. 19. 17. Luk. 10. 25 28. in earth but in heaven The life which is promised to them that keepe the Law is eternall but in this Covenant life is promised to them that keepe the Commandements Not only long Psal 34. 12 13. life and good dayes in the Land of Canaan but eternall life is assured by the promise to them that keepe Covenant as eternall death and destruction is comprehended under the curse denounced against them that breake the Covenant Expresse mention of Gal. 3. 13. the King some of Heaven perhaps is not found in the Old Testament but eternall life is comprehended under the termes of life and blessing as eternall death under the tearmes of death and the Curse Eternall life in heaven eternall death in hell the Law noteth though it doe not expressely name them Which things unlesse they had been commonly knowne in the dayes of our Saviour the penitent Thiefe about to die had not thought of a Kingdome nor the Lord promised Paradice to him when he asked a place in the Kingdome of the M●ssiah But all these promises were made of fre● grace and of free love accomplished Speake not thou in thine heart after that the Lord Deut. 9. 4 5. thy God hath cast them out from before thee saying For my righteousnesse the Lord hath brought me in to possesse this Land but for the wickednesse of these nations the Lord doth drive them out from before thee Not for the righteousnesse or for the uprightnesse of thine heart doest thou goe to possesse their Land but for the wickednesse of these Nations the Lord thy God doth drive them out from before thee and that he may performe the word which the Lord sware unto thy Fathers Abraham Vers 6. Is●●k and Jacob. Vnderstand therefore that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good Land to possesse it for thy righteousnes for thou art a stiffe-necked people True it is the promises runne upon this condition If ye obey my voice and doe my Commandments But conditions are of two sorts antecedent or consequent Antecedent when the condition is the cause of the thing promised or given as in all civill contracts of Justice where one thing is given for another Consequent when the condition is annexed to the promise as a qualification in the Subject or an adjunct that must attend the thing promised And in this latter sence obedience to the Commandments was a condition of the promise not a cause why the thing promised was vouchsafed but a qualification in the subject capable or a consequence of such great mercy freely conferred Of them that slip aside and transgresse the Covenant God calleth for and commandeth repentance that is it is his will and command that they
those faults which are remitted to the guilty 2 King 8. 9 10. 1 King 21. 21. For it is essentiall to punishment that it should be inflicted for sinne but not that it should be inflicted upon him that hath offended Thirdly that an innocent person may thus in justice and equity suffer for a nocent there is required besides the acts of ordination in the supreme of submission in the suretie and of consent in Actus cui poena inest est actus nocivus qui nec omnibus nec in omnes concessus Quare ut poena sit justa requiritur ut actus ipse poenalis sit in potestate punientis quod ter contingit aut antecedenti jure ipsius punientis aut justo valido consensu ejus de cujus poena agitur aut ejusdem delicto the delinquent first an intimate and neere conjunction in him that suffereth with those that should have suffered Severall unions and conjunctions there are as Politicke between the members and subjects in a state and thus the people were punished for Davids sin 2 Sam. 24. 14 17. and in a common-wealth universally sinfull a few righteous men may as parts of that sinfull society be justly subject to those temporary evils which the sins of that society have contracted See 1 Sam. 12. 25. Naturall as between parents and children so the Lord visited the sins of Dathan upon his little ones Numb 16. 27 33. Valer. Max. de Dion Siculo Plutarch de sera Num. vindict Mysticall as between man and wife so the Lord punished the sins of Amazia● the Priest of Bethel by giving over his wife unto whoredome Amos 7. 17. And we see in many cases the Husband is liable to be charged and censured for the exorbitancies of his wife Stipulatorie and by consent as in the case of fide jussores obsides who are punished for the sins of others whom they represent and in whose place they stand as a caution and muniment against injuries which might be feared as we see in the Parable of a Prisoner committed to the custody of another person 1 King 20. 39 42. So the surety is punished for the debtor Possessorie as between a man and his goods and so we find that a man was to offer no beast for a sin-offering but that which was his own Lev. 5. 6 7. Besides there is required in the innocent person suffering that he have a free and full dominion over that from which he parteth in his suffering for another As in suretiship a man hath free dominion over his money and therfore in that respect he may engage himself to pay another mans debt but he hath not a free dominion over himself or his own life and therefore he may not part with a member of his own in commutation for anothers as Zaleucus did for his sonne nor be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to lay down his own life for the delivering of another from death except in such cases as the Word of God limiteth and alloweth Now all these things hold in Christ in a speciall manner There is a most neere conjunction between him and us He conversed amongst men and was a member of that Tribe and Society amongst whom he lived and therefore was together with them under that Romane yoke which was then upon the people and in that relation paid tribute unto Cesar He had the nature of man and was subject to all humane and naturall infirmities without sinne He was mystically married unto his Church and therefore was answerable for the debts and misdemeanours of his Church He entred into Covenant and became surety for man and therefore was liable to mans engagements He became the possession in some sort of his Church whence it is that we are said to have him 1 Joh. 5. 12. not by way of dominion for so we are his 1 Cor. 6. 19. but by way of communion and propriety He was Lord of his own life and had therefore power to lay it down and to take it up And this power he had though he were in all points subject to the Law as we are not solely by vertue of the hypostaticall union which did not for the time exempt him from any obligations of the Law but by vertue of a particular command constitution and designation to that service of laying down his life This commandement have I received of my Father Joh. 10. 18. Moreover he had power ample enough to breake thorough the sufferings he undertooke and to assume his life and former condition again I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up And therefore it was most just and righteous that Christ in himself innocent should suffer for us in our selves guilty which doth more plainly appeare in that all parties are glorified and all parties are willing and well-pleased All parties are glorified The Father is glorified in the obedience of his Sonne Joh. 12. 27 28. John 17. 4. The Sonne is glorified by the Father Joh. 17. 5. Heb. 2. 7. crowned with glory and the sinner glorified being received into favour Ioh. 17. 24. All parties are willing the Father is willing for by his Ordination he appointed Christ unto it Act. 4. 27 28. and in his love and compassion bestowed Christ upon us Ioh. 3. 16. by his divine acceptation he rested well pleased in it Matth. 17. 5. and by his wonderfull wisdome fitted it to the manifestation of his glory and mercy to the reconciliation of him and his creature and to the exaltation of his Sonne The Sonne is willing he chearefully submitted unto it Heb. 10. 9. and freely loved us and gave himself unto us Gal. 2. 20. The sinner is willing and accepteth and relieth upon it The summe of all is this By the most wise just and mercifull will of God by his owne most obedient and voluntary susception Christ Jesus being one with us in a manifold and most secret union and having full power to lay downe and to take up his life again by speciall command and allowance of his Father given him did most justly without injury to himself or dishonour to or injustice in his Father suffer the punishment of their sins with whom he had so neere an union and who could not themselves have suffered them with obedience in their own persons or with so much glory to Gods justice mercy and wisdome And though the will of God being ever just is to us a sufficient cause of what God willeth and the reason thereof be to us unsearchable yet in this matter we can assigne just and weighty reasons of this will of God out of the Scriptures God will not execute the severity of his Law because he is mercifull slow to anger and ready to forgive His free and everlasting love and infinite delight which he hath in mercy disposeth him aboundantly to pardon and exercise loving kindnesse in the earth Exod. 34. 7. Micha 7. 18. Ionah 4. 2. 2 Chron. 30. 9. Psal 86.
the righteous who standeth out and appeareth for us 1 Joh. 2. 1. It consisteth in two things First his appearing or presenting of his person in our nature and in his owne as a publike person a Mediatour a sponsor and pledge for us as Judah was both a Mediatour to request and a surety to engage himselfe to beare the blame for ever with his Father for his brother Benjamin Gen. 43. 8 9. And Paul for Onesimus a Mediatour I beseech thee for my sonne Onesimus Philem. 9 10. and a Sponsor If he hath wronged thee or oweth thee ought put that on mine account I will repay it ver 18 19. So Christ is both a Mediator and surety for us Heb. 7. 22. and 8. 6. Secondly the presenting of his merits as a publike satisfaction for the debt of sin for the justice of God would not be entreated or pacified without satisfaction now that is for ever because he shall not cease to appeare The Intercession of Christ is his gracious will fervently and immoveably Heb. 7. 25 28. Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. desiring that for the perpetuall vertue of his Sacrifice all his members might be accepted of the Father whereunto answereth the consent of the Father in whose bosome he is who heareth him alwaies Joh. 11. ●2 and in whom he is well pleased Mat. 17. 5. who called him to this office of being as it were master of Requests in the behalfe of his Church and promised to heare him in his Petitions Rom. 8. 34. 1 Joh. 2. 1. This Intercession of Christ is generall and particular for all and every faithfull man I pray not for the world but for all that thou hast given me Joh. 17. 9. for all that shall beleeve vers 20. Simon Simon Satan hath desired to winnow you as wheate but Exod. 28. 21. I have prayed for thee Luk. 22 31 32. As the high Priest went into the Sanctuary with the names of the twelve Tribes upon his breast So Christ entred into the holiest of all with our persons in our behalfe and doth carry all his people upon his breast and presents his desires unto his Father for them It is also heavenly and glorious for our Saviour doth not fall upon his knees or prostrate himselfe before his Father as in the da●es of his humiliation for that is not agreeable to that glory he hath received and to which he is exalted but after a manner befitting his glory doth present his good will and pleasure to his Father that he may thereunto put his seale and consent It is a praying not out of private charity as the Saints pray one for another in this life but out of publike office of mediation by a publike person set up not only to pray for the Church in generall but to present the prayers of particular men to God in their behalfe Quia enim pij● perpetuò littgandum fit cum Satana mundo car●e ac etiam ipsa lege ira Dei ejuso probationibus ac mora in exaudiendo ipse Spiritus S. illos consolatur instituit ut Advocatus in foro clientem Dicitur ergo Paracletus Alvocatus Patro●as qui suo clienti in per●culo judicij ad ●at eum consclatur instituit pro eo etiā loquitur deniq omnibus modis illi patrocinatur not out of humility which is a proposing of requests for things unmerited which we expect of meere grace according to the free promise of God but out of authority which is the desiring of a thing so as that he hath with all a right joyntly of bestowing it who doth desire it True Intercession as it is a publike and authoritative act is founded upon the satisfactory merits of the person interceding He cannot be a right Advocate who is not a propitiation too The Spirit is our Advocate by energie and operation by instruction and assistance as by his counsell inspiration and assistance he enableth the faithfull to pleade their own cause But Christ is our Advocate by office as he taketh upon himselfe the cause of his Church in his owne person applieth his merits in heaven and furthers the cause of our Salvation with his Father The Spirit maketh inter●ellation for men in and by themselves emboldening them in their feares helping them in their infirmities when they know not what to pray and giving them accesse unto the Father Ephes 2. 18. Heb. 10. 15. 19. Rom. 8. 26. Ephes 3. 16. and is their Advocate as he leadeth them into all truth and teacheth them so to pleade their cause that they have wherewith to defend and comfort themselves Joh. 14. 16. against the criminations and tyrannie of the world Joh. 16 7 8 But Christ by his Intercession applieth his satisfaction made and laies the salve to the very sore And so the Intercession of Christ implies three things The perpetuall vigor of his sacrifice the will of Christ fervently desiring that all his members might be accepted for the vertue of his sacrifice and the will of God resting well pleased with us in his beloved Sonne The Saints on earth pray mutually one for another according to Gods commandement not in their owne names or for their owne merits but for the merits and in the name of Jesus Christ but the Intercession of Christ is no wayes reciprocall he prayeth for all and every one that is given unto him of the Father and that through the vertue of his sacrifice but they pray not for him This Intercession of Christ is ever effectuall because the Father heareth and answereth him and as he hath a power to intercede for us so hath he power to conferre that upon us for which he intercedeth I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter Joh. 14. 16. If I goe not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you Joh. 16. 7. Christ as man praying for himselfe was heard in that which he feared though the Cup did not passe from him but Christ as Mediatour is ever heard in the particular which he desireth Many and great benefits come to the Church of God by the Intercession of Christ Jesus 1. Hereby the faithfull are assured of protection and defence against the continuall temptations assaults and accusations of all their spirituall enemies Satan and the world Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen againe who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for us Rom. 8. 34. I pray that thou wouldest keepe them from evill Joh. 17 15. But are not the faithfull subject to evills corruptions and temptations still how then is that part of the Intercession of Christ made good unto us For the understanding hereof we must know that the Intercession of Christ is a vaileable to the faithfull presently but in a manner suteable and convenient to the present estate and condition of the Church so that
which as they are preparations fit the soul for Gods effectuall calling to be given they have their end when this immortall seed com●th to be sown in us The second Question is whether the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of will not whether grace hath its intrinsecall vertue to worke after the manner of grace or a supernaturall agent from the liberty of the will which all men deny Though if grace encline the will to a vitall and internall ac● it takes away some degrees of indifferency and addeth some weight of disposition rather to will then to nill But the Question is whether grace effectuall doe leave the will at liberty actually to resist it or no or whether it be from grace or the liberty of will that this man doth assent and not another why grace in the second act is Motion● efficacis conceptu quidditativo includitur actuale obsequiumillius qui efficaciter movetur alioqui motio illa esset sufficiens non efficax Eze. 36. 24 26. Deut. 30. 6. Col. 2. 11. Ezek. 11. 17. Jer. 24. 7. 31 33 37. Isa 54. 10. 50. 20 21. Phil. 4 13. 1 Joh. 4. 4 Ephes 3. 16. Deut. 29. 4. Isa 44. 3. effectuall to the producing of conversion in Peter and not in Judas If grace take away the stonie heart then it removeth in us whatsoever should resist or make head against the Spirit for the will cannot resist when corruption is removed and to resist the application of grace sufficient is no small part of a stony heart A cause in power only is not a cause but a cause in act applied which is then sufficient and not potent only to doe somewhat when applied in act it bringeth forth effect sufficient I say not physically but morally presupposing the actuall application of it to that purpose And on the other side if the heart of stone be not taken away sufficient grace was not actually applied of God for that speciall effect for a fleshie heart cannot be received by a stony but the stony is removed by the fleshie There is the same reason of that grace of conversion and of the grace that followeth after conversion but the grace following conversion borroweth not its efficacy from the liberty of the will That which God promiseth to doe cannot be the condition of the thing promised because the promise is precedent but God promiseth to give a new heart and to put his Spirit into the inner man and that not for their sakes but of his free-grace And this promise God did Ezek. 36. 32. fulfill daily in the Church of the Jewes but more sparingly according Isa 40. 40. Luk. 3. 6. J●●l 2. 28. Act. 2. 16 17. Ephes 1. 19. 1 Pet 1. 5. to the measure of grace the fulnesse whereof was reserved unto the times of the Messiah That which the omnipotency of God is put forth to worke in the creature that the creature cannot resist But God putteth forth his omnipotency that by the effectuall working thereof he may bring us to beleeve To say that notwithstanding Gods helping grace man may resist is to put grace in mans power not to put mans will under the power of grace to make man able to frustrate Gods counsell touching his conversion and make God a lyar in that which he hath sworne touching the gathering of his people The worke of conversion is wrought in the will not from any naturall power of suffering but from the obedience in which it is to Gods almighty power which it cannot but obey and come to any thing whereunto he will bring it For the will hath no naturall inclination to suffer any thing both for the being and manner of it above nature as in the eye now blinde there is no naturall power to receive sight And if there were a power naturall to receive conversion then there must be some agent in nature able to worke conversion for there is not found a power naturall of suffering in any thing but there is found a power correspondent working upon it But to leave the efficacy of grace to the liberty Servas beri instrumentum est sed non necesse est ●erus determinet singulos actus servi A● omnis causa subordinata ita Deo ut quodlibet instrumentum passivum agenti libero c. of mans will to chuse or refuse that doth make the will no instrument subject to Gods power but giveth it power to doe as it will when God hath done all he may unto it If God doe not apply and determine the creature to will and worke that which he worketh in the creature then the creature is the cause why God worketh and consequently why he willeth the conversion of man For Gods concourse working this or that must either goe before the will and so cause it to will or else it must follow accomplishing that which man willeth But the will of man hath no causall force on God himselfe nor doth his will follow or attend upon the will of man If the efficacy of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will then God doth not certainly fore-know the conversion of man For God cannot know this or that mans conversion certainly from eternity but he must see it certaine in himselfe willing it or in the causes of it or he must see it from all eternity as being present to himselfe out of the causes But if the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will God doth not certainly will and determine the conversion of man Certitudo mentis absque omni entis certitudine necessitate est impossibilis Quis Deo determinationem tribuerit au● rationi à Deo moraliter ad●ibitae quando tota causalitas determinativa quanta quanta est nec à Deo nec à ratione proficiscatur Joh. 6 37. Jer. 31. 34. Isa 54. 13. 1 Cor 4 7. Effectus producti in ●ec objecto non in illo non sunt tribuendi causae communiter agenti 1 Thes 2. 3. Ephes 2. 2. nor is it determined in its causes or circumstances and that he hath these things as existing forth of their causes from eternity to eternity co-existent with him is an unconceiveable absurdity God doth see what a free creature will doe being set in such and such circumstances because he doth see how his power would determine him in such and such occasions but to make him see determination when neither himselfe hath any way determined when the circumstances doe it not when nothing in the free creature doth determine him is to make him see that which neither in the creature nor in himselfe is to be seene They that are given unto Christ of the Father and taught of the Father they come unto Christ freely but necessarily withall not in respect of the liberty of will for necessity flowes not there from but the efficacie of grace they come unto Christ they are not so disposed that they might come or not come A
likewise in his calling to the participation of the Covenant For though this Vocation be every way free gracious and absolute as the Spirit worketh where he listeth yet in the Gospel which is the instrument of Vocation it pleaseth God to propound both the condition which he requireth and the promise which he hath made The promise as an argument to move us the rather to give our selves unto Christ and to doe what is required The prescription of what he requireth as that condition without which we cannot obtaine and by which most certainly we shall obtaine what good is promised Effectuall Vocation on Gods part is the powerfull invitation and assured drawing of the weary and thirsty soule unto Christ that in him it might finde refreshing and comfort The answer on our part is a free and willing comming unto Mat. 11. 28 29. Joh. 6. 44. and 6. 35 37. Christ that in him we might be satisfied the embracing of Jesus Christ and lodging him in our bosome And therefore that which first of all receiveth that Vocation is faith whereby we believe that if a man performe the condition he shall possesse the promise if he come unto Christ he shall be satisfied but if he performe not the thing required he shall not enjoy the promise he shall not be satisfied if he drinke not the water of life And not only so but he shall continue poore naked blinde miserable captive a prisoner an alien from the Covenant and without God in the world nay he shall be punished with contrary evils according to the nature of the Covenant divine where there is no promise without a commination contrary to it This faith is grounded upon the free and gracious Covenant whereby God is pleased to binde himselfe first unto us before he binde us unto himselfe that his promise might be apprehended as the ground of our faith upon which we should firmely beleeve And upon the Isai 55. 1 2. Joh. 7. 37. Rev. 22. 17. free and gracious invitation of Christ generally made to all and every poore thirsty languishing faintie soule parched with the sense of wrath and withered for lack of the sap or fruit of grace to come unto him for ease and sweet refreshing to the contentation and satisfying of their soules to come and drink of the waters of life freely Where let it be observed that Thirst and Drinesse in phrase of Scripture doth note the want of good things as Isai 29. 8. Psal 42. 1. Isai 32. 2. and 55. 1. Psal 143. 6. on the contrary absolute good whereby the desire of soule and body may be satisfied is usually compared to waters To thirst is from a totall defect of the Spirit of Grace or a defect of the whole Spirit of Grace tormenting the soule to desire it And so not to thirst for ever and the graces of the Spirit to remaine Joh. 4. 14. and 7. 38. in us for ever or that water to be in us a fountain of water springing up to life eternall is one and the same In Heathen authors to thirst is exceedingly to desire but for the most part that desire comes from some tormenting want Artemidorus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Cyrus willing to declare his ardent desire of doing good to others saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Sitio aliis gratificari In which signification it is used by the Latines also Cic. pro Planc Deinde sitientem me virtutis tuae deserüisti Apud Horat. Sitis argenti Apud Juvenal Sitis famae Apud Claudian Sitis praed● And the opposition that is betwixt thirst and water will evidence the same For water if we respect the use which it affordeth to the earth and to bodies doth make fruitfull barren fields purifie things polluted q●ench or water them that are drie and sweetly refresh them that boyle with heat And therefore if water metaphorically signifie comfort and refreshing wherewith the soul is recreated and rejoyced Thirst which is opposite to water doth denote a soul dried up with grief spent with the heat of Gods indignation and tormented with the vexing or molesting want of grace and consolation To be weary and heavie laden is to be faint or tired under some burden labour Deut. 25. 18. ● Sam. 17. 2. and 23. 10. Psal 6. 7. See there journey disease or work But tirednesse and fainting wearinesse and trouble are no parts of health or ●ase no more then the sight feeling or knowledge of the disease is any part of the cure wearinesse and fainting is neither part degree nor preparative to refreshing if in it self considered And here the doubt touching the precedency of faith and repentance may easily be determined For if faith be taken largely or generally for a beliefe of the promise if we repent and receive it then faith is before repentance for there can be no turning without hope of pardon nor comming home by hearty sorrow without some expectation of mercy Thus the Exhortations run Turn unto the Lord for he is mercifull and gracious Repent for the Kingdome of God is at hand But if faith be taken more strictly for that faith or beliefe whereby we receive embrace or rest upon the promise of God in Christ Jesus for pardon and forgivenesse then repentance goeth before pardon for no remission is promised to Mark ● 4. Luke 24. 47. be enjoyed but upon condition of repentance and if the penitent only be immediately capable of pardon then pardon is received by a penitentiall faith If repentance be necessary to Justification of necessity it must goe before justifying faith because faith and justification are immediately coupled together It is impossible to come unto Christ without repentance but to come unto Christ is to embrace or receive him soundly and effectually to the refreshing of the soul Comming unto Christ is a lively motion of the soul wherein arising from sin it draweth nigh or approacheth unto Christ that in him it might be satisfied The motion is one but the points are two For in drawing nigh unto Christ the soul ariseth from sin which may be called repentance Of the signification of the word I will move no question at this time but take repentance for a comming unto Christ by true godly sorrow from whom we had formerly departed by sin and wickednesse to the extreme hazard of our souls The Author of repentance is God in Jesus Christ Repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. Jer. 31. 18. is the gift of God but the act of man It is man that repenteth and not God but it is God that giveth repentance inableth and moveth man to repent Regeneration is the act of God repentance the act of man In subject they both agree for he that is Ezek. 36. 25. regenerate doth also repent and so on the contrary but in their formall consideration and peculiar nature they are distinct Christ also as Mediatour is the principall cause of repentance for him hath God exalted to give repentance